Que Pasa en Oaxaca?

November 7, 2006

November 6, 2006

Que Pasa en Oaxaca?

by Michael McCaughan

A virtual state of siege prevails in Oaxaca City where thousands of military police have occupied the central square and surrounding streets, clearing barricades and detaining dozens of opposition activists. The city’s emergency services are idle while banks and schools remain closed and the city center, usually bustling with tourists, has the air of a ghost town. The hub of activity has shifted to the Santo Domingo church where thousands of activists gather daily to swap news, make plans and denounce police brutality.

The federal police occupation began on October 28 with an aggressive push toward the Zocalo (town square) which was occupied in June by teachers, students and workers demanding the removal of discredited state governor Ulises Ruiz. The roots of the conflict go back a month earlier when teachers occupied the city square in demand of better pay. This annual protest dates back twenty-six years and the ritual typically ends with a small wage increase being approved. This time, however, Governor Ruiz violently evicted the teachers from the square, provoking a popular uprising.

Workers and students united to shut down government offices and seized local radio and television stations. The state government ground to a halt and Ruiz has gone into hiding, communicating through paid announcements in the press.

"The conflict in Oaxaca is almost over," announced Ruiz on Friday–confirmation, if it was necessary, that his hiding place must be a long way from Oaxaca.

The opposition formed the Oaxaca People’s Popular Assembly (APPO), which comprises 200 organizations drawn from 600 villages and towns across the state, all determined to stand firm until Ruiz has left office and with him the federal security forces.

The APPO is a temporary alliance of activists ranging from moderates with links to the ruling party to radicals calling for armed struggle to overthrow the state. In conversation with APPO members this week there was consensus that the time had come to replace traditional political parties with community-based governing assemblies, in keeping with indigenous tradition.

On the eve of the police occupation the teacher’s union signed a wage agreement and agreed to go back to work. The push to topple Ruiz would have continued but the core of the resistance movement was effectively neutralized. On that same day, however, government officials opened fire on a group of protestors, killing US citizen Brad Will and raising the profile of the dispute internationally.

Under pressure to resolve the impasse, President Fox dispatched police with orders to retake the square and dismantle barricades around the city. Mexico’s congress simultaneously pushed for the resignation of Ruiz, to ease tensions. However the plan backfired as Ruiz refused to step down and appears determined to hang on until the bitter end.

The governor represents the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), which ruled Mexico from 1929 until 2000, combining populism with repression. In recent years the PRI has seen its power base eroded around the country, but Oaxaca, where the party has governed uninterruptedly for seventy-seven years, remains a significant fiefdom.

The situation is further complicated by the upcoming handover of presidential power to Felipe Calderón on December 1. Calderón’s National Action Party (PAN) needs PRI support to govern effectively in congress and legitimize its candidate’s feeble electoral victory. It is believed that Ruiz has demanded the PAN support him in return for PRI cooperation in the coming months.

Meanwhile, the military police have failed to crush the resistance movement. Indeed it is the federal police themselves who now look surrounded and isolated as they camp out in the square. In a dynamic new tactic protestors surge toward the square, chanting slogans and testing defenses at different entry points.

According to internal security documents, the police mission comprises three phases; the retaking of the square and clearing of all major barricades; the seizure of occupied radio and TV stations; and a final phase in which arrest warrants would be served on 200 APPO members and a major clampdown imposed to dampen resistance efforts.

The square was retaken last weekend in a day of violence which saw three people killed, dozens more injured and at least fifty people detained. The APPO militants abandoned barricades rather than clash with heavily armed police, but for every dismantled barricade three more appeared at significant intersections across the city.

On Thursday police engaged in running battles with protestors outside the university campus, where several people were snatched by police and taken by helicopter to a nearby airbase. The local police have also set up a "safe house" opposite a soft drink warehouse, where neighbors have reported cries of torture from "ghost" detainees yet to be formally charged or processed through the courts. There are now seventy-nine prisoners and thirty-seven "disappeared" citizens, sparking a desperate search by concerned relatives.

The authorities believed that by clearing the square, a potent symbol of APPO power, the movement would lose its focus. However, the repression has only multiplied the resistance as students shut down university faculties across Mexico and Zapatista rebels closed down the Panamerican Highway near Guatemala. Radio Universidad, playing a vital role in coordinating APPO activities, has been broadcasting hundreds of declarations of support from around the world.

By the end of the week President Fox had declared that he was leaving the Oaxaca conflict to his successor, Felipe Calderón. At a meeting with stockbrokers this week, Calderón outlined his future strategy for guaranteeing security around the country; "Will it be easy?" he reflected, "No…this is a problem which will take time, money and very probably it will cost more lives. "

Molly Ivins: Campaign ‘06—Goodbye and Good Riddance

Molly Ivins: Campaign ‘06—Goodbye and Good Riddance

Right to the end, this insane conversation between reality and Not Reality. The president of the United States STILL says we are reducing terrorism by fighting in Iraq; STILL says we are creating democracy; STILL says we’re preventing the spread of nuclear weapons and making Israel more secure; and, shoddiest of all, STILL not allowing that our fallen have died in vain.

The vice president, meanwhile, has announced that, all things considered in Iraq, “if you look at the general, overall situation, [the Iraqi government is] doing remarkably well.” And now he’s gone off to hunt in South Dakota, thus demonstrating a perfectly balanced sense of reality. South Dakota is so sparsely populated, it’s really hard to hit another hunter.

Meanwhile, in case you hadn’t noticed, Iraq is in a state of full collapse. And Afghanistan is not far from it. Baghdad is worse off for water, sewer, electricity and infrastructure than it was before the war. The R’s have taken care of the whole problem with the brilliance we have come to expect from them—they have decided to abolish the Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction (which has exposed bribery, contracts to cronies, shoddy work, the loss of billions of dollars, the failure to track hundreds of thousands of weapons shipped there, and more). You must admit this is big, bold and brainy. This is Karl Rove problem-solving at its best.

This campaign has been like getting stuck in Alice’s Wonderland for three months. “There is no use trying,” Alice said, “one can’t believe impossible things.”

“I daresay you haven’t had much practice,” replied the White Queen. “When I was your age, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.”

Every time you turn around, you run into the Jabberwocky or the Frumious Bandersnatch—Richard Perle in penitence—or some other equally fantastic sight. The great Skywriter in the Sky has positively run amok with irony and has been splashing it all over the campaign like Jackson Pollock. Fortunately, it is not my duty to lend dignity to the proceedings. I do make it a rule to skip talk of sex, drugs and rock ’n’ roll—but when Mark Foley turns out to be the chairman of the House Caucus on Missing and Exploited Children, you know you just have to sit down like a tired dog and scratch for a while.

While this perfectly insane dialogue has been taking place, Congress stands before us so hopelessly corrupt that the stench has washed all over the country. Perhaps my least favorite excuse for cheating is “Everybody does it.” NO, everybody DOESN’T do it. Nor does the system make you do it, or alcohol or drugs or Jack Abramoff. I do not want to hear one more excuse—apologize and go.

On the other hand, I am really going to miss the stories this Congress provided. Remember Terri Schiavo? I mean, you wake up one morning and there it is, kind of like finding Fidel Castro in the refrigerator. And you listen to these people who hold high elective office having this debate—as though they know, as though they have any idea, as though they have any right. And then there are some of the troops, like Randy “Duke” Cunningham, semi-owner of the houseboat The Duke-Stir. Some days you couldn’t wait to get up to find out who’d been indicted. I miss watching Katherine Harris from Florida wear less and less blue eye shadow as she went through her Senate race.

Well, it’s been rank—racist, sleazy, lying and full of insinuating scare tactics. Thank God it’s over.

United States accused of interference ahead of vote for next WHO chief

United States accused of interference ahead of vote for next WHO chief

Posted: 2006/11/07

‘’The U.S. government has a direct role in every significant decision made in Geneva, and even close to a veto role,'’ said Dr. Richard Horton, editor of the influential medical journal, The Lancet International Herald Tribune

(AP) - GENEVA: The World Health Organization is convening this week to pick its next leader, and some leading public health officials are worried the new chief may not have the strength to stand up to Washington on drug and sexual health policy. Critics say WHO has been largely controlled behind the scenes by the United States — its biggest donor, and one which many contend is intent on promoting the interests of its pharmaceuticals industry and the Bush administration’s ideological line on issues like abortion.

Leading public health experts and senior WHO officials told The Associated Press that Washington consistently interfered with policy under the U.N. agency’s last director-general, Dr. Lee Jong-Wook, who died in May. "The U.S. government has a direct role in every significant decision made in Geneva, and even close to a veto role," said Dr. Richard Horton, editor of the influential medical journal, The Lancet. Horton also sits on an independent advisory panel for WHO.

In one prominent case, the United States recently requested the suppression of a book commissioned by WHO that criticized U.S. free trade agreements for jeopardizing poor countries’ access to cheap medicines. In a letter to WHO’s acting director-general, a senior official from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said the report "spuriously" characterized of U.S. trade policy. WHO has yet to make a decision on the U.S. demand. "Standing up to the U.S. is not the easiest thing to do at the WHO," said Sisule Musungu, a Kenyan intellectual property specialist, who co-authored the report with a former WHO staffer.

The episode has sparked concern from two U.S. Democrats, Senator Edward Kennedy and Representative Henry Waxman, who have called for an investigation into how American trade agreements threaten the health of people in developing countries. "Attempting to suppress a report because it is critical of U.S. trade policy is unacceptable," Kennedy wrote in a letter to Mike Leavitt, Secretary of Health and Human Services. "We need more — not less — analysis of the factors affecting global public health."

Contenders for the top job include former Hong Kong director of health and WHO insider Dr. Margaret Chan, Mexican Health Minister Dr. Julio Frenk, and longtime WHO Kuwaiti official, Dr. Kazem Behbehani. After three days of closed-door deliberations, WHO’s executive board, comprised of 34 representatives from 193 member states, will announce the new leader on Wednesday.

For many, the clearest sign of U.S. meddling under Lee’s tenure came in January, when WHO’s top official in Thailand was stripped of his post after he said in an editorial that a U.S.-Thai free trade agreement would jeopardize Thai access to cheap drugs, leading to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of AIDS patients. The official, Dr. William Aldis was swiftly dispatched to the WHO’s regional office in New Delhi, India, and was given no explanation for his demotion.

Aldis was authorized by WHO rules to write the editorial, which largely followed the lines of WHO policy on generic AIDS drugs. Several Asian newspapers complained about American interference, and the transfer was the subject of articles in Britain’s Financial Times accusing the U.S. of bullying the international organization and endangering the lives of AIDS patients. "This was an example of an instance where there was probably pressure from a certain member state, in this case the U.S., and unfortunately, WHO was not able to take a clear stance in defending health issues," said Dr. Tido von Schoen-Angerer, of Medecins Sans Frontieres, which works closely with WHO.

Several senior WHO officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, told The Associated Press that American opposition to Aldis was indeed behind his removal. The United States denies it had anything to do with Aldis’ transfer. "We had no role in that," said Bill Hall, a spokesman for the U.S. Health and Human Services Department.

Though Hall says Washington formally complained to the WHO about the editorial, he said no suggestions were made about disciplining Aldis. The Bush administration has challenged ideologically charged WHO programs such as needle exchanges and condom distribution. Republican policies have had a "chilling" effect on condom distribution in Africa, a WHO official who works on HIV/AIDS said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic. Bush has made more money available for AIDS research than any previous American president, but that largesse has not been extended to programs in reproductive and sexual health. "As soon as the word ‘abortion’ appears, there is likely to be severe scrutiny from the Director-General’s office," said a WHO official who works on reproductive health issues and spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media.

In the case of Thailand, experts say, WHO’s AIDS policy has wideranging implications. Thailand has often been praised as a success story in its approach to tackling AIDS — producing cheap, generic versions of anti-retrovirals. More than 80,000 people depend on these life-prolonging treatments and AIDS deaths have dropped by nearly 80 percent in the last decade.

Advocacy groups say a free trade agreement with the United States could jeopardize all that: in exchange for increased trade with Washington, Thailand would be obliged to tighten its intellectual property laws, making it harder to produce generic drugs without the consent of the company holding the patent. Normally, there is great flexibility under World Trade Organization rules for manufacturing generic drugs for domestic use.

Since the publication of Aldis’ editorial, the Thailand-U.S. free trade agreement has been stalled — largely because of the attention drawn to what the pact would do to Thailand’s strategy on fighting AIDS. For some who have worked at the top echelons of WHO, the imprint of the U.S. has been unmistakable. "A huge number of decisions at WHO were affected by the U.S. And the ones that weren’t were in areas in which the U.S. didn’t have a particular interest, like whether the leprosy department should be in Geneva or Delhi," said Dr. Jim Yong Kim, former WHO AIDS director.

In reproductive health, Washington allegedly has delayed the approval of lists of essential medicines for countries because they included drugs that could induce abortions. In malaria control, WHO’s recent endorsement of the use of the controversial pesticide DDT was seen by some in the malaria world as a capitulation to the American industries that produce it since other equally effective alternatives exist.

http://mathaba.net/rss/?x=545472

Renowned Writers, Artists Send Letter of Support to Oaxaca

You, too, can support the people of Oaxaca by signing this petition.

November 3, 2006

Renowned Writers, Artists Send Letter of Support to Oaxaca

NEW YORK
Thirty-three prominent writers, artists, filmmakers, plus many others have signed an open letter denouncing the Mexican government’s manipulation of the death of Brad Will, a 36-year-old U.S, journalist and filmmaker, as an excuse to attack the grassroots people’s movement in the state of Oaxaca.

PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
November 3, 2006 Contact:
Beka Economopoulos, (917) 202-5479
Eric Laursen, (917) 806-6452
Simon Sedilla, (646) 842-7556

RENOWNED WRITERS, ARTISTS SEND LETTER OF SUPPORT TO OAXACA

DANNY GLOVER, WALLACE SHAWN, EVE ENSLER, MICHAEL MOORE, ALICE WALKER,
GLORIA STEINEM, EDUARDO GALEANO, HOWARD ZINN, ARUNDHATI ROY AND OTHER
LUMINARIES DENOUNCE MEXICAN GOVERNMENT’S USE OF DEATH OF BRAD WILL TO
JUSTIFY REPRESSION

NEW YORK – Thirty-three prominent writers, artists, filmmakers, plus
many others have signed an open letter denouncing the Mexican
government’s manipulation of the death of Brad Will, a 36-year-old U.S,
journalist and filmmaker, as an excuse to attack the grassroots people’s
movement in the state of Oaxaca.

The letter reads, in part: “We are extremely alarmed to see that rather
than cracking down on the violent paramilitaries who have been launching
regular attacks on the people of Oaxaca, President Vicente Fox is using
these murders as a pretext for escalating violence against the popular
grassroots organization of the people of Oaxaca.” Signatories include:
Noam Chomsky, Mike Davis, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, Eve Ensler, Danny
Glover, Naomi Klein, Michael Moore, Mira Nair, Arundhati Roy, Wallace
Shawn, Starhawk, Gloria Steinem, Alice Walker, and Howard Zinn.

The signatories demand that the government recognize the removal of
ousted Oaxaca governor Ulises Ruiz, withdraw federal troops from Oaxaca,
free all detainees, and bring to justice the paramilitaries and other
government allies who for months have conducted a reign of terror
against the people of Oaxaca.

Release of the letter has already made news in Mexico, where it was
featured on the front page of yesterday’s edition of leading newspaper
La Jornada. It is still accumulating signatories. Complete text of the
letter and list of signatories can be viewed at
http://www.friendsofbradwill.org/supportletter

Canadian National Medicare Tour

The Medicare Works: Keep it Public, Keep it Fair, Campaign Presents:
WE CAN’T AFFORD PRIVATE HEALTH CARE
Cross-Canada Town Hall Meetings
October 18 to December 5, 2006


Ontario Dates & Locations:

KINGSTON
Wed, Nov 15, 7 - 9 pm, Rm 201 Kingston Hall, Queens University.
Featuring: Tom Kent senior policy aide to Lester B. Pearson, head of Kent Commission on Media Ownership, fellow Queen’s University School of Policy Studies; Steven Shrybman, Partner Sack Goldblatt Mitchell - with a public interest law practice defending medicare including intervention in Chaoulli, and the successful Ontario Hydro privatization case; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition.

CORNWALL
Thurs, Nov 16, 6:30 - 8:30 pm Cornwall Library, 45 Second St. E.
Featuring: Sid Ryan president CUPE Ontario; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition, others TBA

OTTAWA
Mon, Nov 20, 7 - 9 pm Ottawa Library, 120 Metcalfe St.
Featuring: Steven Shrybman Partner Sack Goldblatt Mitchell - with a public interest law practice defending medicare including intervention in Chaoulli, and the successful Ontario Hydro privatization case; Allan Maslove, Professor of Economics Carleton University; Mike McBane, Coordinator Canadian Health Coalition; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition.

SUDBURY
Tues, Nov 21, 7 - 9 pm, Finlandia Village Nursing Home, 233 4th Ave.
Featuring: Gerry Lougheed, local business & community leader; Rick Grylls President Mine Mill 598/CAW; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition.

SAULT STE MARIE

Wed, Nov 22, 7 - 9 pm, Auditorium, Algoma University
Featuring: Lynn Watson Reeve Echo Bay; Norm Rivard, Asst. Director United Steelworkers; Mike McBane Coordinator Canadian Health Coalition; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition.

THUNDER BAY
Thurs, Nov 23, 7 - 9 pm, Public Library Auditorium, 285 Red River Road.
Featuring: Alvin Fiddler, Deputy Grand Chief Nishnawbe Aski First Nation; Norm Rivard, Asst. Director United Steelworkers; Mike McBane, Coordinator Canadian Health Coalition; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition.

PETERBOURGH

Thurs, Nov 23, 7 - 9 pm, Evinrude Centre, 911 Monaghan Rd.
Featuring: Cathy Graham Lecturer Trent-Fleming School of Nursing; Eduardo Sousa Council of Canadians; Dr. Michael Rachlis policy analyst and author.

KENORA
Sat, Nov 25, 11:30 am - 2:30 pm, Rotary Meeting Rm, Recreational Centre, 200 5th St. South
Featuring: Ralf Mosher, retired Engineer, Kenora & District Coalition of Seniors; Rory McMillan, City Councillor; Colin Wasacase, retired City Councilor, Mike McBane, Coordinator Canadian Health Coalition; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition.

SOUIX LOOKOUT
Nishnawbe-Gamik Friendship Centre, 52 King St.
Featuring: Dr. Claudette Chase, Canadian Doctors for Medicare; Laura Wynn, Director Nishnawbe-Gamik Friendship Centre; Mike McBane, Coordinator Canadian Health Coalition; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition.

BRANTFORD
Mon, Nov 27, 7 - 9 pm, Polish Alliance Hall, 126 Albion St.
Featuring: Dr. Gordon Guyatt Medical Reform Group, Professor McMaster University; Richard Carpenter, City Councillor; Eduardo Sousa Council of Canadians.

ST CATHARINES
Tues, Nov 28, 7 - 9 pm, Russell Avenue Community Centre, 108 Russell Ave.
Featuring Eduardo Sousa, Council of Canadians, others TBC

PARRY SOUND
Tues, Nov 28, 7 - 9 pm, West Parry Sound District Museum, 17 George St.
Featuring: Dora Jeffries, Co chair Ontario Health Coalition and Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition, others TBC

LONDON
Wed, Nov 29, 7 - 9 pm, Legion, Br. 263, 499 Hill St.
Featuring: Maude Barlow, National Chairperson Council of Canadians; Nancy McMurphy CAW National Executive; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition.

KITCHENER
Thurs, Nov 30, 7 - 9 pm, Kitchener Public Library, 85 Queen St. N.
Featuring: Maude Barlow National Chairperson Council of Canadians; Paul Moist, National President CUPE; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition

TORONTO
Fri, Dec 1, 7 - 9 pm, St. Andrew’s Church, 73 Simcoe St.
Featuring: Maude Barlow National Chairperson Council of Canadians; Naomi Klein journalist & author; Ana Gladys El Salvadorean Solidarity; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition. ($20 per ticket.)

HAMILTON
Mon, Dec 4, 7 - 9 pm, Lakelands Centre, 180 Van Wagner’s Beach Rd.
Featuring Linda Haslam Stroud, President Ontario Nurses’ Association; Rolf Gerstenberger, President USWA local 1000A; Dr PJ Devereaux, Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition

SCARBOROUGH
Tues, Dec 5, 5 - 8 pm, Malvern Library, 30 Sewells Rd.
Featuring: Paul Moist, National President CUPE; Natalie Mehra, Director Ontario Health Coalition, others TBA

Across Canada:

New Brunswick
Saint John, Wed, Oct 18
Newfoundland & Labrador
St. John’s, Thurs, Oct 19
PEI
Charlottetown, Tues, Oct 24
Nova Scotia
Halifax, Wed, Oct 25
Shelurne, Thurs, Oct 26               
Quebec
TBA
Manitoba
Winnepeg, Monday, Nov 6
Saskatchewan
Saskatoon, Friday, Nov 17
Alberta
Edmonton, Mon, Oct 20
Red Deer, Tues, Oct 31
Calgary, Wed, Nov 1
Lethbridge, Thurs, Nov 2
BC
Vancouver, Wed, Nov 15
Courtenay/Comox, Thurs, Nov 16
Port Alberni, Fri, Nov 17
NWT
Yellowknife, Sat, Nov 4
Yukon
Whitehorse, Sat, Nov 18

Sponsored by: Ontario Health Coalition & Canadian Health Coalition

Ontario Health Coalition
15 Gervais Drive, Suite 305
Toronto, Ontario M3C 1Y8
tel: 416-441-2502
fax: 416-441-4073
email: ohc@sympatico.ca
www.ontariohealthcoalition.ca

Why am I going on about Oaxaca?

I have a special fondness for Oaxaca having spent many weeks there over the last 10 years. I have hooked up with friends Roz and Carla in Oaxaca two or three times, hung out with Kevin, met a lovely Scottish couple Jax and Matt, met up with Isobel, spent 3 weeks there with Peter.  I have been back to Oaxaca a couple of other times (at least) on my own, always thrilled to arrive at the bus station and see what adventure would unfold. For me, it is a special place and the archeological ruins of nearby Monte Albán, attributed to the Zapotec civilization, are some of the finest in Mexico.

It both saddens and heartens me to read what is happening right now in Oaxaca.  Despite the poverty in Oaxaca City and state (as well as nearby Chiapas), the people still have a spirit of resistance even if it means being ‘disappeared’, jailed, injured or killed.

Oaxaca has a special vitality and the area has produced some of the best artists in Mexico such as Rufino Tamayo, Francisco Toledo and Rodolfo Morales, all of Zapotec lineage. As these artists are relatively unknown to many, I have included the below references.  Perhaps through an appreciation of this artistic heritage, readers without much knowledge of Oaxaca will be able to sympathize with their struggle.

Rufino Tamayo

below is from http://www.adanigallery.com/Tamayo/main.html

Rufino Tamayo (1899-1991) was a Zapotecan Indian born in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. He moved to México City where he attended the Escuela Nacional de Artes Plasticas "San Carlos." Tamayo was exposed to the cultural wealth of pre-Colombian México as he worked as a draftsman at the Museo Nacional de Arqueologia. While his contemporaries Siqueiros, Rivera and Orozco were advocating art with a message, often political, Tamayo’s work focused on plastic forms integrated with a masterful use of colors and textures. Tamayo participated in the development of "Mixografia®," a graphic technique to obtain colored and textured three-dimensional print on handmade paper. He is one of the best known Latin American artists. His exhibitions have been in major museums such as the Palacio Nacional de Bellas Artes, México, The Philips Collection in Washington, The Guggenheim Museum in New York, The Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia in Madrid as well as important art galleries throughout the world.

Francisco Toledo

below from http://www.rightlivelihood.org/recip/2005/francisco-toledo.htm

Francisco Toledo (2005)
Mexico - (Honorary Award)

"… for devoting himself and his art to the protection, enhancement and renewal of the architectural and cultural heritage, natural environment and community life of his native Oaxaca."

Francisco Toledo, a Zapotec, was born in 1940 in the Oaxaca region of Mexico. He studied at the Escuela de Bellas Artes de Oaxaca and the Centro Superior de Artes Aplicadas del Instituto de Bellas Artes, Mexico. In 1960 he moved to Paris from where he travelled through Europe. In 1965 when he returned to Mexico he started to promote and protect the arts and crafts in Oaxaca.

Toledo’s art is imbued with his Mexican heritage of history and mythology. He has exhibited in many galleries in Mexico, Europe, South and North America and Asia. He is represented in public and private collections worldwide.

"Toledo’s work is a seamless meshing of global and local culture and high art. Dream images from his childhood are fused with pre-Colombian symbolism and myriad references to the work of Dubuffet, Miro, Tapies, Klee, Tamayo, Blake, Goya, Ensor and Durer, among other artists, and also to the writing of figures like Kafka and Borges. Snakes and turtles abound, as do rabbits and coyotes, bats and toads, crickets and dogs, as well as human figures from Mexican history, cycling from one work to another in a dizzying bestiary that is part ancient codex, part intensely modern graffiti. Toledo’s work is based in part on the largely misunderstood shamanistic notion of the nagual, the belief that each human’s fate is intertwined with that of an Aztec spirit in animal form."
Christian Viveros-Faune

For more than twenty years Toledo has been concerned with the well-being of the Oaxacan community and has devoted much of his wealth to this purpose. He is an untiring promoter, sponsor and disseminator of the cultural values of his native state, turning its main town into a dynamic centre for the visual arts and literature. He has created children’s libraries in Indian communities, and has founded a number of important artistic and cultural institutions: the Museo de Arte Contemporaneo de Oaxaca, the Graphic Arts Institute of Oaxaca (which holds some 100,000 books on art and architecture), the Jorge Luis Borges Library for the Blind (which Toledo created, he says, after watching a group of blind folk visit a nearby art museum), the Centro Fotografico Manuel Alvarez Bravo, Ediciones Toledo (a printing house, which most recently published translations of the poets John Ashbery and Seamus Heaney), and the Centro Cultural Santo Domingo (botanical garden, art restoration centre and library).

In 1993 Toledo was instrumental in founding Pro-OAX (the Endorsement for the Defense and Conservation of the Cultural and National Heritage of Oaxaca) dedicated to the protection and promotion of art, culture and the built and natural environment of Oaxaca. Through Pro-OAX Toledo has led efforts to protect the architectural and cultural heritage of Oaxaca’s city centre. By turning his own private aesthetic activism into a groundswell of popular civic awareness, he has prevented the construction of luxury hotels, four-lane road expansions and asphalt parking lots. He is also credited with stopping the construction of a cable car to the sacred Monte Alban, and preventing the establishment of a McDonald’s outlet in the town’s main square. Far from preventing Oaxaca’s development, through this activism the town has been transformed into one of Mexico’s major cultural, artistic and political hubs.

go to http://www.franciscotoledo.net/

to view some of his work.

Rudolfo Morales

Rudolfo Morales, 1925-2001, was also a Zapotec and a protege of Tamayo. This article by Stan Gotlieb at http://www.mexconnect.com/lettersfrommexico/morales/sgrmorales.html

gives a brief biography -

Maestro (master, teacher) Rodolfo Morales, one of the most prominent native Oaxacan artists, succumbed to cancer of the pancreas in a Oaxaca City hospital, at 9:30 p.m. on January 30, 2001.

In the seven years that I have lived in Oaxaca, I have often caught glimpses of the Maestro working in his studio; run into him at various cultural functions; and crossed his path on the street. His life and his works have had an affect on my life here, far greater than our nodding acquaintance would suggest (he probably didn’t even know my name). For me, and a great many others, Morales embodied not only Oaxacan culture, but Oaxacan civility and civic responsibility as well.

A Zapotec, born of working class parents, in a small town near Ocotlan de Morelos, a regional market town about 30 miles from Oaxaca city, Maestro Rodolfo rose to be a very wealthy man, with paintings being displayed in major galleries throughout the world. Many who have had his talent and good fortune turned their back on their roots, but not Rodolfo.

The Zapotec traditions include a committment to sharing good fortune with others. The Zapotec word for this social service, transliterated into Spanish, is "Tequio". It is similar to tithing, where labor may substitute for money. In the poorest villages, it is how the roads and the schools get built: everyone gives some labor (or money) to a common project to benefit the community. Rodolfo gave a lot of tequio, far more than was required, but, he acknowledged at one project innauguration I attended, far less than was needed.

His contributions, mostly through a foundation he set up in later years, includes the renovation of fifteen churches and cultural spaces throughout the municipio of Ocotlan. The flagship of this fleet is the church and ex-convent in Ocotlan itself, a dazzling and exquisitely tasteful complex which hosts a gallery, a restaurant, and spaces for meetings, performances and classes.

There is a permanent staff of architects and other experts overseeing all the projects, but each and every project hires local young people, mostly women, to do the work of restoration. We were fortunate enough to spend some time with one of these young women, working on restoring a church in the town of Zagache, Ocotlan. When her work with the restoration project is over, she will be a qualified antiquities restorer, able to get work anywhere. This project has opened up the world to her.

Morales gave his house in Ocotlan, a colonial house, to the Casa de Cultura (state culture ministry) of Oaxaca. Aside from the beautiful garden, and the Maestro’s studio, it contains a computer classroom. The Maestro noted, a few years ago, that computers were the future, and immediately bought a roomful so the local youth could learn.

Much of the house is a sort of museum, housing Rodolfo’s collections of china, stained glass, furniture and bric-abrac; similar to Frieda’s house, and Trotzky’s house, and Abe Lincoln’s. The center of this obra (work) is, in fact, in back and on the second floor: a three-room walk-through that contains the master’s studio.

Every Friday morning, Rodolfo could be found there, painting. In the far room, surrounded by tubes of oil paint, open jars of wash, and in the last couple of years a television set, the master demonstrated to friend and stranger alike, the techniques he used to create the unique canvases that made him famous. We visited him there just three weeks ago, along with a family of friends from California.

Working on five or six pieces at once, Morales answered questions, posed for pictures, and generally played the humble host. Only the humility wasn’t put on. Rodolfo was, in bearing, manner, and presence, a truly humble person. Walking down the street in Oaxaca, he reminded me of a small-town grocer or hardware store owner.

All this past month, the Museo de Arte Contemporanéo de Oaxaca (MACO; the modern art museum) has dedicated its entire second floor to a retrospective of the maestro’s works, from a very "realistic" picture of a drunken campesino sleeping it off on a pile of refuse, to a group of cylendrical "pillars" of painted canvas.

An "out" homosexual, he gave much to the effort to control the spread of AIDS. Currently, some sixty of his prints are for sale by the Frente Común Contra SIDA (common front against AIDS), having been donated by Rodolfo to help them raise needed funds. [They can be viewed at http://www.realoaxaca.com/frente.html]

To view some of his other paintings go to http://artofoaxaca.com/morales_r.html

Photos from 6th Mega Marcha in Oaxaca

Contributed by: Rochelle Gause

Hundreds of thousands of people marched in the streets of Oaxaca today in support of the popular assembly (APPO) and continuing the demand for both Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz and the Federal Preventative Police to go. The decision had been made for the march route to not go near the Zocalo to avoid opportunities for infiltrators to violently confront the federal police. The police installed razor wire and barbed wire at each entrance to the Zocalo. Although there were no attacks during the march, at 7 this morning government gunmen shot at the APPO radio station on the university campus and critically injured Marcos Manuel Sanchez Martinez, a student at the Technological Institute.



In addition to the thousands in the march, the streets were lined with people of all ages applauding and chanting. What looks like the thumbs down by the crowd is actually the chant: ya cayo, ya cayo, ulises ya cayo meaning he’s fallen, he’s fallen, Ulises has already fallen.

for more pictures of the amazing struggle in Oaxaca…

http://www.flickr.com/photos/72025498@N00/

for a list of international solidarity actions…

http://nyc.indymedia.org/es/2006/11/78763.html

Ortega wins Nicaraguan presidency

MANAGUA, Nicaragua

Marcos and the “Other Campaign”

November 6, 2006

Marcos acts with patience, intensity

by Mark Poepsel
Nov 3

Subcomandante Marcos of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation, who in his latest campaign is also known as Delegate Zero, dropped in for a meeting with area indigenous groups Saturday afternoon near Magdalena, Sonora, and conducted what should long be remembered as a patient, thoughtful and peaceful meeting focusing on the airing of grievances from borderlands Indians.

Marcos became famous as the spokesperson and one of the leaders of the Zapatista rebellion in southern Mexico in 1994. Starting the same day the North American Free Trade Agreement took effect, Jan. 1, 1994, the Zapatistas took control of a handful of cities and villages in Chiapas. The bulk of the fighting lasted only 12 days. Now, 12 years later, the nonviolent campaign of words continues. This was a chance for interested people north of the border to join local indigenous groups to see Marcos and hear what he has to say now that NAFTA is old news and now that its effects are more fully known.

NAFTA has not been kind to indigenous people. Corn subsidies in the United States keep prices so low that it can be sold in Mexico for lower than the cost of production for small farmers. After being pushed off their farms, many indigenous people have few options: look for poorly paying work in the informal economy, try to find work in an urban center like Mexico City or migrate to the United States looking for a job that pays in a day what they might earn in two weeks in parts of Mexico.

With a group of Latin American studies and anthropology graduate students, I attended the event on a farm on Highway 15 in Sonora near Magdalena - roughly two hours south of Tucson.

The sights and sounds of the event burned vivid memories. The smells of the dust of the farm and of Marcos’ tobacco pipe are the first to come to mind. There is also the taste of beans, rice and roast beef in red chili sauce, which is hard to forget as that meal warmed and filled my stomach on a cold desert night.

Working to connect the indigenous Zapatista movement in the south of Mexico to political efforts of indigenous tribes and communities in Mexico’s north, Marcos has been traveling throughout the region for a couple of weeks on the "Other Campaign."

This is opposed to Mexico’s presidential campaign - one that ended in a statistical tie and that was ultimately decided by Mexico’s highest election court. Marcos had no part in it because in the view of Delegate Zero, all major party candidates (and some from minor parties, for that matter) are sellouts who don’t care about the minority indigenous populations.

The most remarkable concept to share from the event in Sonora is that everything was perfectly normal. It was a meeting for people - most importantly, indigenous people - to air their grievances and push for political change.

Marcos’ presence is meaningful because he is a world-famous symbol (maybe a celebrity) of opposition to neoliberalism. That can be a daunting term. Put simply, what the man in the mask represents is the indigenous person against the big, subsidized corporate farm of the United States and Canada and the indigenous person against the big, subsidized royal expeditions of Spain and Portugal. In case the average reader has forgotten, indigenous people are still alive across the hemisphere and still working to preserve their cultures and lives against invading forces.

You may have heard of Marcos as a terrorist, and he has been criticized for not working within Mexico’s democracy for his cause. To that accusation, Marcos often quotes Martin Luther King Jr. In his Letter from Birmingham Jail, King wrote: "Lamentably, it is an historical fact that privileged groups seldom give up their privileges voluntarily."

Marcos is an intellectual - smart enough to know when violence is necessary and smart enough to put violence on the shelf for more than a decade to conduct meetings, take notes, smoke his pipe and laugh. We students in Latin American studies and anthropology noticed that he sat and listened to representatives from local indigenous groups for six hours without eating or drinking - never leaving the table.

He taught me one lesson: Leadership is knowing when to take action and when to be patient. Beneath dangling 60-watt bulbs, in front of a crowd of no more than 250 people on a tiny farm in the southern half of the Sonoran desert, Marcos demonstrated when to shut your mouth and open your eyes.

He’s continuing with a relatively small project that holds keys to the biggest secrets of lasting global peace. He finds power in patience, in silence and in a 12-year-old threat.

Mark Poepsel is a Latin American studies graduate student.